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Marcel P. Zwiers

Researcher at Radboud University Nijmegen

Publications -  159
Citations -  11540

Marcel P. Zwiers is an academic researcher from Radboud University Nijmegen. The author has contributed to research in topics: Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder & White matter. The author has an hindex of 50, co-authored 152 publications receiving 8979 citations. Previous affiliations of Marcel P. Zwiers include Radboud University Nijmegen Medical Centre & Max Planck Society.

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Subcortical brain volume differences in participants with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in children and adults: a cross-sectional mega-analysis

Martine Hoogman, +92 more
TL;DR: Lifespan analyses suggest that, in the absence of well powered longitudinal studies, the ENIGMA cross-sectional sample across six decades of ages provides a means to generate hypotheses about lifespan trajectories in brain phenotypes.
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HHS Public Access

Martine Hoogman, +247 more
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Common genetic variants influence human subcortical brain structures.

Derrek P. Hibar, +344 more
- 09 Apr 2015 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conduct genome-wide association studies of the volumes of seven subcortical regions and the intracranial volume derived from magnetic resonance images of 30,717 individuals from 50 cohorts.
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The ENIGMA Consortium: large-scale collaborative analyses of neuroimaging and genetic data

Paul M. Thompson, +332 more
TL;DR: The ENIGMA Consortium has detected factors that affect the brain that no individual site could detect on its own, and that require larger numbers of subjects than any individual neuroimaging study has currently collected.
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The genetic architecture of the human cerebral cortex

Katrina L. Grasby, +359 more
- 20 Mar 2020 - 
TL;DR: Results support the radial unit hypothesis that different developmental mechanisms promote surface area expansion and increases in thickness and find evidence that brain structure is a key phenotype along the causal pathway that leads from genetic variation to differences in general cognitive function.